- Make *mandatory* optional (and default to false); this
allows shorter lists of entries
- Allow degenerate entries which are just a name
(which have *mandatory* set to false as well).
SEE #992
- Allow just a name entry, instead of requiring an object
entry; this makes "foo" equal to { name: "foo", runlevel: "default" }
and simplifies more for the straightfoward case of #974.
- Based on comments from #974, follow the configuration
scheme from services-systemd, so with separate lists
"services" and "disable". This ties it **slightly**
less closely to the commands passed to rc-config.
- If runlevel isn't set (at all) then use "default". For
most systems that do not use multiple runlevels, this
simplifies the configuration to just a list of service names
to add or delete.
- Document the functions some more
- Only "state" (i.e. action) "add" and "del" make sense,
avoid calling rc-update for other keys (e.g. typo's).
This matches the documentation, although there might be
other actions that make sense (see also services-systemd,
with its enable, disable and mask actions).
- With refactored code, introducing new kinds of actions
is very few lines of code. Allow disabling targets
(services was already possible). Allow masking units,
but as a special case require the complete name.
FIXES#975
- The three steps of modifying services in the target
system do basically the same thing, so factor out
the loops and logging into a systemctl() function.
- Log to warning() instead of just debugging, on failure.
If USE_<foo> is given a value that doesn't match **anything**,
then bail out. Since USE_* is an explicit distro choice for a
specific implementation, it's an error if that implementation
is not there.
When there are multiple modules doing a thing and it really only
makes sense to have one of them in a given Calamares compilation,
the USE_<foo> variables allow you to select one, while ignoring
all the other implementations. If USE_<foo> is not set, all
implementations are included (as usual).
- A valid line (as explained in the comments at the top of
the locale.gen file) is <locale> <encoding> (two fields),
so lines with more than two fields can't be valid locale-
listing lines. For them, pretend they name locale "",
which won't be matched.
- Improved debug-logging
- Fix the actual problem of listing locales more than once,
by listing them all, uniqified, at the end, with an explanitory
comment in the generated file.
- Be more accepting of what constitutes a locale-line; this allows
spaces before and after the `#` comment sign, but because we're
uniquifying, this doesn't cause duplicates.
- Because we write the enabled locales at the end, the full file
comment-header is retained un-mangled (instead of accidentally
enabling a locale mentioned as an example there).
Testing for existence of a file in the live system, and then
copying it in the target system, is not a recipe for success.
- Fix the restore-from-backup part.
- Document that your live and target system must both have
/etc/locale.gen if you want this to work at all.
Also make install for yum and dnf follow the documented syntax: options
(-y) before the command (install), even though yum and dnf also accept
the other order. This also makes it consistent with remove.
Untangle the shortcuts; Create and Cancel had an overlap.
Skip 'r' (Revert all changes) and 'e' (Edit) and settle on
'a' (which might also mean "Add").
FIXES#977
Introduce the notion of emergency modules and emergency jobs.
Initial use will probably center around the preservefiles module,
and possibly umount.
FIXES#928
A potentially emergency module is one that has EMERGENCY
(in CMake) or emergency: true (in module.desc) set.
Any such module must also set emergency: true in the
configuration of the module. This is to allow for
instances of a module that **don't** run as emergency
modules, alongside actual emergency ones.
- In many cases, using QLatin1String is a de-optimization, when
applied to a C string literal. Kevin Kofler pointed out that
those should basically all be QStringLiteral, instead. (Compile
tests with -O3 show that in the optimized object file, the
code size difference is negligible).
- Drop the explicit constructor entirely in cases where we're calling
QProcess::execute(), for consistency.
- Do a little less messing around in the mapping of keyboard locales
to keyboard map names.